Inter Miami CF Major League Soccer News https://www.sun-sentinel.com Sun Sentinel: Your source for South Florida breaking news, sports, business, entertainment, weather and traffic Mon, 12 Aug 2024 15:59:19 +0000 en-US hourly 30 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 https://www.sun-sentinel.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/Sfav.jpg?w=32 Inter Miami CF Major League Soccer News https://www.sun-sentinel.com 32 32 208786665 Fort Lauderdale to say bye-bye to Inter Miami in 2026. Kind of. But not really. https://www.sun-sentinel.com/2024/08/09/fort-lauderdale-to-say-bye-bye-to-inter-miami-in-2026-kind-of-but-not-really/ Fri, 09 Aug 2024 22:35:35 +0000 https://www.sun-sentinel.com/?p=11671799 Two years from now, the Inter Miami soccer team will have not one stadium, but two across South Florida.

The smaller Chase Stadium in Fort Lauderdale opened in 2020. The larger Miami Freedom Park stadium being built in Miami is expected to open in time for the 2026 season. When it opens, that stadium will become the team’s home base.

For the past few years, South Florida fans have been traveling to Fort Lauderdale to watch the team’s games. What’ll they do now? The team will keep on playing at Chase Stadium for the 2025 season. Here’s a guide to what comes next.

Will Inter Miami abandon Chase Stadium once bigger digs open in Miami?

No. Chase Stadium, formerly DRV PNK Stadium, will continue to serve as the team’s headquarters, training facilities and youth program.

Will soccer legend Lionel Messi play at the new venue, Miami Freedom Park?

The Argentine superstar joined the team last summer. Messi’s $150 million contract expires at the end of 2025 but has an option for 2026. But it remains unknown whether he will stay beyond the 2025 season.

In June, Messi said Inter Miami likely will be his “last club.” The World Cup champion told ESPN he had no plans to join an Argentine club before ending his playing career. “I think Inter Miami is going to be my last club,” he said. “It was a difficult step to leave Europe to come here. Having become a world champion helped a lot, and also to see things differently. But I don’t think about it. I try to enjoy. That’s why I enjoy everything much more, because I am aware that there is less and less to go and I have a good time.”

Is Miami Freedom Park a stadium only?

Most definitely not. The $1 billion project known as Miami Freedom Park will transform a former golf course into a sprawling entertainment site with the stadium as its anchor. The 131-acre project calls for a 58-acre park, shops, restaurants, three hotels and office buildings. The taxpayer-owned site sits just east of Miami International Airport.

In 2018, Miami voters said yes to a plan authorizing city officials to lease the property so private developers could build Miami Freedom Park. Nearly four years later, in April 2022, Miami commissioners approved the deal. The city will collect $2.67 billion in rent over the course of the 99-year lease. Construction began last year.

Will Fort Lauderdale be sad to see the team make the move to Miami?

“It’s disappointing to know that the games will be played in Miami,” Fort Lauderdale Mayor Dean Trantalis said. “But the administrative offices and the youth academy will remain in Fort Lauderdale. The team will still practice in Fort Lauderdale. And many of the players will remain (at their homes) in Fort Lauderdale. Very little will change. Many of the games will still be played in other parts of the country and the world anyway.”

What ever happened to the park Miami Beckham United promised to build next to Chase Stadium?

The 20-acre park has yet to break ground. But it will get built, city officials say.

The park was part of the deal Beckham United made with Fort Lauderdale to build a stadium on taxpayer-owned land. The project has stalled partly because the team is using the 20-acre parcel for overflow parking.

When will the new Fort Lauderdale park open?

That remains to be seen. Fort Lauderdale entered into mediation talks last year with Beckham United to iron out several matters, including a dispute over whether the city should pay a $6 million tab for demolition costs of the former Lockhart Stadium.

So far, the mediation has not led to a resolution.

What does the city’s district commissioner have to say?

Commissioner John Herbst says he’d like to see construction on the park begin in spring 2025. But he’s worried the groundbreaking might be delayed another year until the team moves to Miami.

“We’re four years behind schedule now,” Herbst said. “If we let them keep using the space, my community is going to be denied the use of that park for another year.”

Susannah Bryan can be reached at sbryan@sunsentinel.com. Follow me on X @Susannah_Bryan

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11671799 2024-08-09T18:35:35+00:00 2024-08-09T18:40:09+00:00
DeSantis: Florida to spend $8 million on road to ease gridlock at new Inter Miami stadium https://www.sun-sentinel.com/2024/08/08/inter-miami-joins-desantis-for-announcement-at-stadium-this-afternoon-in-fort-lauderdale/ Thu, 08 Aug 2024 17:31:52 +0000 https://www.sun-sentinel.com/?p=11668414 The long-awaited soccer stadium being built by the owners of Inter Miami at Miami Freedom Park is expected to open in late 2025.

And when it does, South Florida soccer fans should find it a little easier to make their way to games and other events thanks to a new road that will be partly funded by $8 million in state tax dollars.

Gov. Ron DeSantis shared the news Thursday from a stage set up at Chase Stadium in Fort Lauderdale, current home base for Inter Miami and its superstar player, Leo Messi.

“We’ve never given state money to build a soccer stadium,” DeSantis said. “Our role as the state government is not to give money to a team, but to create an environment where everyone can be successful. And infrastructure is a big part of that.”

Florida will dedicate $8 million in funding from its Job Growth Grant Fund to Miami-Dade County to help build a roadway that’s going to help get people where they need to go and relieve traffic at Miami Freedom Park, DeSantis said.

“We don’t want a situation where people aren’t going to be able to get there,” the governor added. “We’re creating a nice artery where people can get to where they need to go. This will lead to even more tourists wanting to come visit the state of Florida.”

In the audience were team owners Jorge and José Mas, Fort Lauderdale Mayor Dean Trantalis and State Rep. Chip LaMarca, R-Lighthouse Point. Team owner David Beckham did not attend.

Messi, who was also absent, got a shout-out from DeSantis nonetheless.

“When they brought Messi on, that was the best thing ever,” the governor said.

Jorge Mas, the team’s managing owner, beamed while DeSantis spoke.

“I think today is an extremely important announcement,” he said after the governor invited him to say a few words. “Inter Miami was built on a dream.”

That dream, he said, was to bring professional soccer to South Florida.

Miami Freedom Park will include the county’s largest park at 58 acres, Jorge Mas said.

“The stadium is 100 percent privately funded,” he added. “It’s going to house hotels. It’s going to house offices. It’s going to house businesses.”

And, he added, it’s going to house a new soccer stadium that will be finished in fall of next year, just in time for the 2026 season.

Inter Miami’s corporate headquarters will remain in Fort Lauderdale after the team’s eventual move to Miami.

The Fort Lauderdale stadium opened in March 2020, but the plan was always to build a bigger stadium in Miami. The $1 billion project known as Miami Freedom Park also calls for a 58-acre public park and more than 1 million square feet of space for three hotels, office buildings, and an entertainment district with shops and restaurants.

In 2018, Miami voters said yes to a controversial plan to lease a mammoth city-owned property that once served as a golf course and develop it into Miami Freedom Park. The property sits just east of Miami International Airport

In 2022, Miami commissioners approved a 99-year lease deal with Miami Beckham United, paving the way for the 25,000-seat soccer stadium that will eventually become home base for the Inter Miami team.

Construction began last year.

Susannah Bryan can be reached at sbryan@sunsentinel.com. Follow on X @Susannah_Bryan

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11668414 2024-08-08T13:31:52+00:00 2024-08-09T07:05:22+00:00
Olympics spell out America’s soccer problem, and a solution that doesn’t exist | COMMENTARY https://www.sun-sentinel.com/2024/08/08/mac-engel-olympics-spell-out-americas-soccer-problem-and-a-solution-that-doesnt-exist/ Thu, 08 Aug 2024 09:30:00 +0000 https://www.sun-sentinel.com/?p=11682273&preview=true&preview_id=11682273 By Mac Engel
Fort Worth Star-Telegram

Four young kids kicking a soccer ball on a beach in Portugal partly explains why America is where it is with the beautiful game.

The group of four became six. Then eight. Then nine. Girls. Boys. Men. Women. No cones. No lines. No goals. No nets. No officials. No coaches. No sanctioning fees. No schedule.

Just a ball.

Dribbling. Bouncing. Bending. Passing. Tapping. Even to the untrained eye the ball control, and eye-foot coordination, looked damn near perfect.

Similar anecdotal examples are all over the place in Portugal, a modest nation of 10.4 million people. A person in America with its population of 336 million may go years without seeing such a scene here in the United States.

“You can’t force a kid to play on the streets here,” FC Dallas youth and boys’ academy directory, Chris Hayden, said in a phone interview.

America and its relationship with soccer has only been solidified since the early ‘90s. That’s roughly the time when we decided to care about a sport that is deified in every other nation on earth, and the game has grown steadily here ever since.

Americans who grew up in the ‘80s, or before 1995-ish, could not have conceived the state of the game would be where it is today in this country. A viable, stable professional league. A growing market to watch the leagues all over the world. Hosting World Cups. American players playing in the top leagues overseas.

America is good at fútbol, and still not even close to the best. The results this summer illustrate where we really sit. One month after it failed to get out of pool play at the Copa America tournament by losing two of its three matches, the U.S. Men’s National team lost 4-0 to Morocco in the quarterfinals of the Olympics.

(Men’s soccer in the Olympics is a 23-and-under tournament; it’s this way to essentially protect the value of FIFA’s cash elephant that is the World Cup).

This is a men’s national team issue that is in neither crisis nor is it an embarrassment. The USMNT should be a bit better than it’s played this year.

The U.S. women’s team has no such issues, for now. It’s at the top of the food chain, due primarily because this country heavily invested in the sport for girls ahead of the rest of the world. The U.S. defeated Germany 1-0 on Tuesday in Paris to advance to the gold medal match.

The rest of the world is catching the U.S. women, a development the sport needs. It’s hard to see the U.S. ever catching up to the rest of the world on the men’s side.

“We have improved and we’re getting better, but the challenge is the bar continues to be raised,” Hayden said. “And that bar is being raised by countries that had a 100-year head start (compared to the United States).

“It’s a little bit like basketball. You’re seeing European players all over the NBA now, and countries that haven’t been really playing for that long really improving, but they’re still behind the U.S.”

Hayden said the days of a kid “coming off the beach” in Europe and South American to immediately take to their youth national teams and dominate are “a thing of the past.”

Any country that has a dime to spend is mimicking some of the American system of development, and investment. Because nearly every team in these countries is a “selling club;” they’re developing talent with the goal of cashing in the lucrative “transfer fee” game.

One of the persistent challenges that the American system faces is the American-born player knows how only to play with a coach in their ear. When the American kid plays, it’s most likely a practice outlined by a coach, or game that follows a “plan.”

There is little room for the player to adopt a natural, individual, feel for the game, like a kid on a basketball court.

“The player in some ways has never been better, but it’s a double-edged sword,” Hayden said. “It’s not organic the way it was in the ‘70s or ‘80s. You’re seeing some of that now in Europe, too.

“Clubs are now trying to develop those areas for ‘free play.’ Because you do need that. The free flow and the creativity. You don’t want to coach those qualities out of them.”

It’s hard to coach it out of the American kid because they likely didn’t have it in the first place.

The net result of this is the state of the game has never been better in the United States, but the same can be said of France, Spain, Italy, Germany and the rest.

©2024 Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Visit star-telegram.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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11682273 2024-08-08T05:30:00+00:00 2024-08-12T11:59:19+00:00
Injured or exhausted, soccer players endure an international schedule with little respite https://www.sun-sentinel.com/2024/08/06/injured-or-exhausted-players-endure-an-international-schedule-with-little-respite/ Tue, 06 Aug 2024 22:24:17 +0000 https://www.sun-sentinel.com/?p=11682208&preview=true&preview_id=11682208 The sight of English soccer player Harry Kane shuffling off the field after an hour of ineffective play in the European Championship final was not how most would have expected his tournament to end.

In truth, he probably should not have been playing at all. Kane missed the end of the Bundesliga season with Bayern Munich because of a back injury. It was serious enough that it made him questionable for the team’s Champions League semifinal against Real Madrid in May.

He was not the only player to be hampered. Jude Bellingham was still suffering from the aftereffect of a dislocated shoulder in November and may need surgery. For months, Bellingham has been wearing strapping on his shoulder that enables him to play freely. Some good news for Real Madrid fans is that Kylian Mbappé is unlikely to need surgery on his nose after breaking it while playing for France at the Euros.

Spanish goalkeeper Unai Simon had an operation on his wrist shortly after the tournament, which had been needed for some time. He managed to get through Spain’s victorious Euro 2024 campaign by using painkilling injections.

It was a similar story at the Copa América. You will have seen the pictures of Lionel Messi in tears, his ankle looking about twice the size it should have been after injuring it in the final. He already had to nurse his way to that final after suffering a groin problem in Argentina’s second game against Chile.

His Inter Miami teammate, Luis Suárez, also  had to miss the MLS All-Star Game with what has been described as knee discomfort, presumably related to the chronic knee issue he has had to manage for the past few years.

But perhaps more than all of that, many of the biggest players just looked exhausted.

“It’s so tough with crazy schedules and then coming together for the end of the season for one last tournament,” Bellingham said after the final. “It’s difficult on the body — mentally and physically you are exhausted.”

Bellingham, 21, played 54 games for club and country in a season that spanned 11 months, from the second week in August to the middle of July. Real Madrid manager Carlo Ancelotti tried to manage Bellingham’s game time, giving him the odd week off here and there, but even when he was left on the bench at times, Ancelotti pressed him into action — shoulder strapping and all.

It is no wonder Bellingham was tired, but his workload was relatively light compared with others. Manchester United’s seemingly indestructible Bruno Fernandes got through 5,399 minutes last season. William Saliba of Arsenal in the Premier League and Germany’s captain, Ilkay Gundogan, also got more than 5,000 minutes under their belts. “It has been a very demanding season,” Gundogan said during Euro 2024.

Julián Álvarez might not have played the same number of minutes (3,480 for Manchester City), but his schedule has been brutal. His season began Aug. 11, playing for Manchester City until May, with his longest break between games coming in at 13 days. Fifteen days after the FA Cup final, he appeared in his first pre-Copa game for Argentina. He played two friendlies before starting all but one of its games during the tournament, then, after a break of 10 days, he was on the team for Argentina’s opening game at the Olympics, that marathon game against Morocco.

All of which backs up the point being made by FIFPro, the global players’ union, and some of the leading European leagues as they issue a legal complaint against FIFA, accusing soccer’s governing body of presiding over an international calendar that is “beyond saturation.”

FIFPro said: “The schedule has become unsustainable for national leagues and a risk for the health of players. FIFA’s decisions over the last years have repeatedly favored its own competitions and commercial interests, neglected its responsibilities as a governing body and harmed the economic interests of national leagues and the welfare of players.”

It is worth pointing out that complaints from Premier League teams about overwhelming scheduling ring hollow. They conduct lengthy preseason and postseason tours, which involve heavy travel. Chelsea is playing five games in 13 days in a preseason tour spanning the United States. Tottenham Hotspur and Newcastle United flew to Australia the day after the last Premier League season finished.

The point remains that the approach of FIFA — and most other governing bodies, including UEFA — to scheduling has consistently been “more is more.” The expansion of the World Cup from 2026, the revamped Champions League format, the new Club World Cup, the Nations League and whatever other brilliant wheezes they can dream up, all mean it is technically possible for an elite men’s player to play 87 games next season. No player will actually be on the field that many times, but it illustrates the point FIFPro is making. There is too much soccer, and even if you do not really care about player burnout, the overwhelming amount of games devalues the whole thing.

“You start in August and until May you don’t stop,” said Spanish soccer player Mikel Oyarzabal. “Then in June there is the national team and after that a Club World Cup. They will finish up in July and then, a few weeks later, the league starts again. It needs to be turned back, but it is not up to us. We have to adapt as best we can.”

Clubs generally do their best to regulate the number of games their key players appear in, and have a variety of methods to judge when the players are reaching their capacity and need a rest. But the sheer number of games — and their importance — means it can be difficult to determine which ones a player can miss.

There is also the desire from the players involved to play in games that from a medical perspective, they probably should not have done. Everyone who played through injury at the Euros and the Copa this summer probably would have rested had they been run-of-the-mill league games.

FIFPro has also raised concerns about excessive painkilling injections that are often given to players to squeeze a few more minutes or games out of them. The risk is not the injections themselves, but that they mask the pain that serves as the body’s way of letting the player know they are injured.

The point is that at the major tournaments this summer, despite brilliant play, thrilling moments and new heroes, the overall spectacle was diminished because the biggest stars either got injured, were playing with existing injuries or were tired.

“We are human beings, not machines,” former Liverpool and West Ham goalkeeper Adrián said. “We need a balance, for the fans to enjoy football, too. We need to be fresh and able to play. There are no movies without actors.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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11682208 2024-08-06T18:24:17+00:00 2024-08-12T11:49:16+00:00
There’s still time to catch ‘Messi Experience’ in Miami — plus, get 15% off with Back-to-School promo code https://www.sun-sentinel.com/2024/08/05/the-lionel-messi-experience-is-an-interactive-showcase-of-all-things-messi-2/ Mon, 05 Aug 2024 13:00:00 +0000 https://www.sun-sentinel.com/?p=11584420&preview=true&preview_id=11584420 Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo are the best soccer players of their generation — and maybe any generation — and there really isn’t much separating the two.

Ronaldo has scored more goals, but Messi has won more World Cups. Ronaldo has more Champions League titles, but Messi has more league championships. Ronaldo has his own self-funded museum … and now Messi has “The Messi Experience: A Dream Come True,” a unique multimedia look at the Argentine’s life and career.

The exhibition, available at The Hangar Coconut Grove, 3385 Pan American Drive, Miami, takes visitors on an immersive, interactive exploration of everything Messi, from a recreation of his childhood bedroom in his family’s humble home in Rosario, Argentina, through his triumphs with Barcelona and the Argentine national team.

It was originally set to close in June, but tickets are available through the end of August. And there’s even a Back-to-School promotion: Get 15% off by using code BTSMESSI through Wednesday, Aug. 14.

At one point in the exhibition, a phone rings and the speaker on the other end of the line invites the 13-year-old Messi to come to Spain, launching his unparalleled career. In another place the exhibition explores his short-lived and emotional decision to resign from the national team.

“It’s super important that when you learn about his life you know it wasn’t all great,” said David Rosenfeld, cofounder of Primo Entertainment, the Miami-based company that worked with Messi to put the exhibition together. “So he takes you on that roller coaster. The empowerment that we’re trying to show here, especially for kids, is never give up and it could happen. That’s kind of the message.”

The exhibition features nine interactive installations as well as thematic installations and physical games. Rosenfeld said planning for “The Messi Experience” began more than 2 1/2 years ago, before the player’s greatest triumph, Argentina’s World Cup win in Qatar in 2022, and before his move to Inter Miami and MLS last summer.

But those events necessarily forced some alterations. The tour opens with a recreation of Argentina’s victory parade through the streets of Buenos Aires while in another room there is a much-larger-than-life replica of the World Cup trophy Messi kissed after Argentina defeated France on penalty kicks.

“We would have done it regardless,” Rosenfeld said. “Obviously him winning the World Cup and coming to Miami exponentially helped everything. But he was already Messi.

“We were confident with the fact that he was such a big brand and he was such a big athlete, this was going to be successful.”

Rosenfeld said Messi did not oversee the design of the exhibition nor what’s included, but he did participate in the creation of certain installations and signed off on the project.

“It’s an experience based on his life and his career so he had to have a hand in what’s told, how it’s told,” Rosenfeld said. “He was a big part of it.”

“The Messi Experience” opened April 25 in Miami and has drawn more than 50,000 visitors, Rosenfeld said. The others are in Los Angeles and Buenos Aires, Argentina.

For more information, visit themessiexperience.com.

©2024 Los Angeles Times. Visit latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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11584420 2024-08-05T09:00:00+00:00 2024-08-05T11:38:32+00:00
Inter Miami, without Messi and Suarez, edged 2-1 by Tigres but advance in Leagues Cup https://www.sun-sentinel.com/2024/08/03/inter-miami-without-messi-and-suarez-edged-2-1-by-tigres-but-advance-in-leagues-cup/ Sun, 04 Aug 2024 03:10:14 +0000 https://www.sun-sentinel.com/?p=11660296 Both teams had already advanced to the Leagues Cup Round of 32 before kickoff, and Inter Miami had secured home field advantage for the next game.

Nevertheless, Miami coach Tata Martino said the Saturday night match in Houston against Mexican power Tigres was a perfect barometer to see how his team measured up with another Cup favorite. He found out that defending the Leagues Cup title will not be easy for his team.

Tigres edged Miami 2-1 to win the group in front of a pro-Tigres crowd of 46,080 at NRG Stadium. These two teams could meet again in the quarterfinals, as they are in the same quarter of the bracket.

To read the full report, click here for miamiherald.com

 

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11660296 2024-08-03T23:10:14+00:00 2024-08-04T14:56:17+00:00
Commissioner Don Garber celebrates 25 years at the helm of Major League Soccer https://www.sun-sentinel.com/2024/08/02/commissioner-don-garber-celebrates-25-years-at-the-helm-of-major-league-soccer-2/ Fri, 02 Aug 2024 17:28:22 +0000 https://www.sun-sentinel.com/?p=11662009&preview=true&preview_id=11662009 By ANNE M. PETERSON

Don Garber never pretended to know everything about soccer, but he did know business, and that’s served him well as the head of Major League Soccer for the past 25 years.

Garber celebrates his anniversary as MLS commissioner this month. After he helped rescue the league from collapse in 2001, MLS has steadily grown in profile in the United States and internationally.

“I was an experienced sports marketing executive. I had enormous energy. I loved this sport overall, and I really loved the opportunity that MLS would provide for me personally,” Garber said. “But even to this day, I don’t weigh in on coaching decisions, I don’t drive the technical direction of the league. I influence it, because I feel like I understand strategy, how research can inform decisions, how to create consensus, how to work harder than anybody to get to a preferred outcome. But I’m not a an expert in the sport, and I don’t pretend to be.”

During Garber’s watch, the league has expanded from 12 to 30 teams with the addition of San Diego FC next year. He introduced the league’s marketing arm, Soccer United Marketing, encouraged the construction of soccer-specific stadiums and spurred the growth of an academy system to develop players in the United States.

Two clubs, LAFC and Inter Miami, home of superstar Lionel Messi, are valued at over $1 billion. Total attendance at MLS matches at the halfway point of this season was 6.5 million, up 13% over the same period last year.

Before he came to MLS, Garber was head of NFL International. In 1999, NFL team owners Lamar Hunt and Robert Kraft approached Garber and asked if he might be interested in serving as MLS commissioner. It was a controversial pick, given that Garber had no soccer background.

The league, launched in 1996, was in trouble. It was bleeding millions and by 2001 it appeared on the verge of folding. But Garber persuaded the Hunt and Kraft families and Philip Anschutz to bankroll the league’s teams.

“There were so many challenges but I think the first was legitimacy, relevance, value and position in the major league landscape here in our country, where we were able to, you know drive opportunity, opportunity for players, opportunity for employees, opportunity for fans, opportunities for community,” Garber said. “And I think we achieved that.”

Hunt, who owned the NFL’s Kansas City Chiefs and FC Dallas and the Columbus Crew, passed away in 2006. The Hunt family, which still owns the Chiefs and FC Dallas, remains close to Garber. Clark Hunt even introduced Garber when he was inducted into the National Soccer Hall of Fame.

“He’s definitely a visionary,” Hunt told The Associated Press. “And he’s someone who doesn’t take no for an answer. If there’s a problem that doesn’t appear to have a solution, he’s going to push and he’s going to find a way to make it happen. I really think those qualities are very important and very helpful to Don in leading Major League Soccer.”

Among Garber’s notable accomplishments is the league’s academy system. All MLS teams now have academies to develop talent, something that had historically been lacking in the United States.

Recently, Philadelphia Union prosect Cavan Sullivan made his debut with the senior team at age 14. In a unique deal, the Union signed him to a contract that will allow him to transfer to Manchester City in the Premier League when he is old enough.

Manchester City allowed the Union to continue to develop Sullivan, signifying confidence in the team’s guidance of the teenager’s career.

The league got a big boost with the addition of Messi, the eight-time Ballon d’Or winner, who was signed by Inter Miami last year. But it’s not just Messi. A record 48 MLS players participated in the recent Copa America and the European Championships.

After a quarter-century, Garber can’t settle on the initiative he’s most proud of. He prefers to look at the totality of his tenure.

“MLS has driven the rise of a soccer nation in America and Canada. And that sounds like it’s amorphous, but it’s not. That’s the most important accomplishment, that we built a powerful soccer nation. We’ve been the driver of the growth of the beautiful game in our region at so many different levels,” Garber said. “We have become a respected league in the eyes of players, fans and institutions that govern the sport. I am most proud of that. ”

___

AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

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11662009 2024-08-02T13:28:22+00:00 2024-08-05T16:17:47+00:00
The music of Messi: Check out tunes inspired by the Inter Miami captain https://www.sun-sentinel.com/2024/07/29/the-music-of-messi-worried-about-his-playing-status-cheer-up-with-some-leo-related-tunes/ Mon, 29 Jul 2024 12:00:01 +0000 https://www.sun-sentinel.com/?p=9922206 Wondering when team captain Lionel Messi will be back to full strength and once again playing for your Inter Miami? Why not relax and enjoy some Leo-related tunes in the meantime?

The South Florida Sun Sentinel has put together “Messi’s Setlist,” complete with songs about his exploits on the field and his World Cup team, Argentina. He’s been particularly associated with Argentinean cumbia and recently starred in a reggaeton video with Maluma that was filmed at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens.

Check out the playlist right here and get to know the soccer superstar through song.

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9922206 2024-07-29T08:00:01+00:00 2024-07-29T15:44:09+00:00
Messi watches as Inter Miami beats Puebla 2-0 in Leagues Cup opener on goals by Rojas, Suarez https://www.sun-sentinel.com/2024/07/28/messi-watches-as-inter-miami-beats-puebla-2-0-in-leagues-cup-opener-on-goals-by-rojas-suarez/ Sun, 28 Jul 2024 04:19:36 +0000 https://www.sun-sentinel.com/?p=11650595 A year after his storybook Inter Miami debut in the inaugural Leagues Cup, Lionel Messi was unable to play Saturday night as his teammates began defense of their trophy with a 2-0 home win against Mexican team Puebla in the 2024 tournament opener.

Messi, who injured an ankle ligament while playing for Argentina in the Copa America final two weeks ago, remained in a protective walking boot and watched the match from a Chase Stadium suite with his wife. He had already missed 13 of Miami’s 25 league games this season.

The men in pink got off to a good start. Paraguayan midfielder Matias Rojas scored on a left-footed blast in the ninth minute to give Miami an early lead. The assist came from Robert Taylor, who signed a contract extension on Friday. Rookie Yannick Bright got the sequence started with an interception and a pinpoint pass from midfield.

Luis Suarez doubled Miami’s lead at the 72-minute mark. He right-footed a shot from the center of the box off a cross from Jordi Alba. The play began with another interception by Bright at midfield, who passed to Julian Gressel, who sent a diagonal pass to Alba. It was Suarez’s team-leading 13th goal of the season.

To read the full report, click here for miamiherald.com

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11650595 2024-07-28T00:19:36+00:00 2024-07-28T00:33:13+00:00
Inter Miami stars Lionel Messi and Luis Suárez to miss MLS All-Star Game https://www.sun-sentinel.com/2024/07/22/inter-miami-stars-lionel-messi-and-luis-surez-to-miss-mls-all-star-game-2/ Mon, 22 Jul 2024 21:38:47 +0000 https://www.sun-sentinel.com/?p=11642905&preview=true&preview_id=11642905 MIAMI — Inter Miami star Lionel Messi won’t play in the MLS All-Star Game while nursing an ankle injury.

The 37-year-old Messi left the July 14 Copa America final win over Colombia with a right ankle injury. His teammate, Luis Suárez, also won’t play in the game Wednesday in Columbus, Ohio, with what the team described as “knee discomfort.”

Both were listed among the unavailable players by the league on Monday.

Messi, an eight-time Ballon d’Or winner from Argentina, has missed Miami’s wins over Toronto FC and the Chicago Fire. The team said both players’ status for Saturday’s Leagues Cup opening match at home against Mexican club Puebla “will be assessed based on their daily recovery process.”

The MLS All-Star Game pits top players from league clubs against players from Mexico’s Liga MX.

Miami teammates Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba will play Wednesday night.

Real Salt Lake forward Cristian Arango will also miss the All-Star Game while serving a four-game suspension from Major League Soccer for violating the league’s anti-harassment policy. Arango leads MLS with 17 goals and 11 assists.

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11642905 2024-07-22T17:38:47+00:00 2024-07-22T18:32:53+00:00